It would be the second, Proofreading.
-When you proofread, you double check everything to make sure it’s grammatically correct and that there are no mistakes before you submit.
FALSE because "Sit!" is a sentence as when you instruct a dog to sit that is a whole sentence on its own.
In the very, very simplest terms, judging the validity of an argument starts centers around this process:
1) Identify the rhetoric (Lines of Argument) from the actual, formal reasons. Separate the persuasive language from the actual claims to truth and fact.
2) Analyze those reasons (claims to truth and fact) by identifying their logic (often in the Implicit Reasons) and evidence.
3) Test and evaluate the logic and evidence; identify logical errors and ask whether the evidence can and has been tested and objectively, repeatedly, factually verified.
Answer:
Explanation:
It makes the reader wonder who the author is talking about when she says “they”. Both sentences are describing a type of person. The reader is meant to question themselves.
Batman is a hero and he saves the city from a lot of criminals.
There was a meteor shower, yet the crew did not know how to avoid the meteors.
Gillian did not like to read and she was not very good at it.